Stanmer House
Stanmer House is a Grade I listed mansion set in Stanmer Park west of the village of Falmer and north-east of the city of Brighton and Hove, East Sussex, England.
The house stands close to Stanmer village and Church, within Stanmer Park. Constructed by the French architect Nicholas Dubois in 1722 in a Palladian style for the Pelham family, it incorporates the remains of an earlier house, and was again altered in 1860.
The house and park were bought by the local authority in 1947.[1] The building was designated as Grade I listed in 1954;[2] the former stables, built c. 1725 but much altered, are Grade II* listed.[3]
Close to the University of Sussex campus, the house was used as a university administration building for some years in the 1960s while the campus was being built in the eastern portion of the park. After undergoing extensive renovation, it reopened in June 2006 and for use as a restaurant and events venue.
In 2009, the Willkommen Collective started a music festival at Stanmer House.[4] The first event featured performances from The Leisure Society, Alessi's Ark, Peggy Sue and more in Stanmer House and grounds. The second festival took place on 12 September 2010 and was named Foxtrot. The lineup included Laura Marling, Anna Calvi, Francois & the Atlas Mountains and Sons of Noel and Adrian.[5] The third annual festival took place in September 2011 and featured Herman Düne, Sam Amidon, This Is The Kit and more.[6]
Alexander Proud took over the lease of Stanmer House in 2016, renaming the House "Proud Stanmer House". This change would be reversed to the traditional "Stanmer House" following Proud's closure of the business.[citation needed]
In January 2020, Proud announced that Stanmer House would close to the public as the company entered liquidation, stating that a rent increase was to blame. However many customers had recently criticised the venue under his company's operation, stating that it was poorly run.[7][8]
Shortly thereafter, Stanmer House was then bought by large local employer and property owner, KSD Support Services. The new leaseholder, owned by local businessmen Chris Gargan, Peter McDonnell and Mark Ratcliffe, reopened Stanmer House for Easter 2021, firstly as The House Cafe and eventually launching the self-titled Stanmer House in December 2022.
Planning permission to convert the house into a hotel is in place, but KSD is uncertain if it will proceed with this plan.[9]
Stanmer House is currently used as a dual-purpose building, with restaurant and cafe premises on the ground floor, and a number of local businesses occupying offices on the upper floors.
The head chef at Stanmer House as of December 2022 is the locally-renowned Russell Tisbury, the previous operator of the successful Tisbury's Kitchen group of kitchen franchises.
Stanmer House was the location of a Mr. Bean sketch from the first episode in which he runs a Reliant Robin three wheeler off the road on the park drive leading to the house, parks outside it and enters to take an examination in trigonometry but only finds the calculus paper in the envelope (for which he has done no revision) only to find that the trigonometry paper is indeed in the envelope. However, he finds out far too late and so is unable to write anything meaningful in the time remaining.
A later scene sees Mr. Bean (Rowan Atkinson) falling asleep during a sermon at the nearby church (a few tens of metres away) with an indignant and shocked churchgoer, Richard Briars, sat in the pew next to him. Bean ends up dozing off on knees and then head at Briars' feet.
References
- ^ "Stanmer House built in 1721-30: extract from The Encyclopaedia of Brighton, Timothy Carder, 1990". My Brighton and Hove. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
- ^ Historic England. "Stanmer House (1380958)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
- ^ Historic England. "Former stables of Stanmer House (1380959)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
- ^ "Willkommen take over Stanmer House". Archived from the original on 25 August 2009. Retrieved 10 August 2010.
- ^ "Willkommen Records » the Melting Vinyl and Willkommen Foxtrot at Stanmer House".
- ^ "News | Herman Dune, Peggy Sue, Sam Amidon for Willkommen Foxtrot 2011".
- ^ Lock, Rose (30 January 2020). "Stanmer House to close as company goes into liquidation". The Argus. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
- ^ Wadsworth, Jo (7 February 2019). "Stanmer House up for let again". Brighton & Hove News. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
- ^ Wadsworth, Jo (13 May 2021). "Stanmer House owners outline plans for their 'jewel in the crown'". Brighton & Hove News. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
External links
- Official website
- Virtual Tour of the house
- Stanmer Preservation Society
- v
- t
- e
- Conservation areas
- Listed buildings: Grade I
- Grade II*
- Grade II: A–B
- C–D
- E–H
- I–L
- M
- N–O
- P–R
- S
- T–V
- W–Z
- List of places of worship (see list for links to individual articles)
- List of demolished places of worship
and mansions
- Adelaide Mansions
- Chartwell Court
- Courtenay Gate
- Embassy Court
- Fife House
- French Convalescent Home
- Grand Ocean, Saltdean
- Gwydyr Mansions
- 75 Holland Road
- Marine Gate
- Marlborough House
- Moulsecoomb Place
- New England Quarter
- Ovingdean Grange
- Ovingdean Rectory
- Patcham Place
- Pelham Institute
- Percy and Wagner Almshouses
- Portslade Manor (ruined)
- Preston Manor
- Regency Town House
- Southdown House
- Stanmer House
- Sussex Heights
- Tower House
- Van Alen Building
- Western Pavilion
squares and
terraces
- Adelaide Crescent
- Arundel Terrace
- Bedford Square
- Belgrave Place
- Bloomsbury Place
- Brunswick Town
- Eastern Terrace
- Hanover Crescent
- Kemp Town
- Lansdowne Square
- Marine Square
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- New Steine
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- Norfolk Terrace
- Old Steine
- Oriental Place
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buildings
civic buildings
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- Hove Trial Centre
- Jubilee Library
- Kings House
- Ovingdean Hall School
- Police Convalescent Seaside Home (former)
- Preston Barracks
- Royal Alexandra Children's Hospital
- Royal Sussex County Hospital
- The Keep
- The Montefiore Hospital
- University of Brighton
- University of Sussex
- Varndean College
- Schools: List of former board schools
- Blatchington Mill School
- Brighton Aldridge Community Academy
- Brighton and Hove High School
- Brighton College
- Brighton College Preparatory School
- Cardinal Newman RC School
- Deepdene School
- Dorothy Stringer School
- Hove Park School
- King's School
- Longhill High School
- Ovingdean Hall School
- Patcham High School
- Portslade Aldridge Community Academy
- Roedean School
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- Varndean School
- Hotels: Bedford
- Clarence
- Grand (1984 bombing)
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- Norfolk
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- Inns and pubs: The Cricketers
- Freemasons Tavern
- Hangleton Manor Inn
- King and Queen
- Prince Albert
- Royal Pavilion Tavern
and leisure
- The Arch
- Blind Tiger Club (former)
- Brighton Aquarium (Sea Life Brighton)
- Brighton Centre
- Brighton Marina
- Brighton Wheel (removed)
- Falmer Stadium
- King Alfred Centre
- Medina House (demolished)
- Pryzm
- Revenge
- Royal Pavilion
- Saltdean Lido
- Withdean Stadium
- Museums: Booth Museum
- Brighton Fishing Museum
- Brighton Museum and Art Gallery
- Brighton Toy and Model Museum
- British Engineerium
- Hove Museum and Art Gallery
- Cinemas and theatres: ABC Cinema (former)
- Astoria (demolished)
- Attenborough Centre for the Creative Arts
- Brighton Dome and Studio (Pavilion) Theatre
- Brighton Hippodrome (former)
- Duke of York's Picture House
- Komedia
- Marlborough Pub and Theatre
- Old Market
- Open Air Theatre
- Regent Cinema (demolished)
- Theatre Royal
- Brighton Palace Pier
- Royal Suspension Chain Pier (demolished)
- West Pier
- Anthaeum (demolished)
- Barford Court
- Chattri
- Church Street Drill Hall (former)
- Clock Tower
- 11 Dyke Road
- Foredown Tower
- Hove War Memorial
- i360
- Madeira Terrace
- North Gate of the Royal Pavilion
- Patcham Pylons
- Peace Statue
- Pepper Pot
- Ralli Hall
- St Dunstan's
- Sassoon Mausoleum
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Hove
- Steine House (YMCA)
- Waste House
- Whitehawk Hill transmitting station
- Charles Busby
- Clayton & Black
- John Leopold Denman
- Thomas Lainson
- John Nash
- Gilbert Murray Simpson
- Thomas Simpson
- Basil Spence
- Amon Henry Wilds
- Amon Wilds
50°52′09″N 0°06′08″W / 50.8693°N 0.1021°W / 50.8693; -0.1021